26 March 2010

"Lost Booker" will honor best work from missing year, 1970

In 1971, in an effort to increase the timeliness of the award, the Man Booker Prize rules committee adjusted its pool of eligible nominees to include contenders only from the current publication year. Since its inception only a few years prior, the award had recognized books published in the previous year.

As a result of the nomination shuffle, the books published in 1970 were never eligible for the prestigious prize. Almost forty years later, the Man Booker Prize will bestow a special "Lost Booker" upon one of six contenders who would have likely been nominated that year: Patrick White (Australia) for The Vivesector, Shirley Hazzard (GB/US/Australia) for The Bay of Noon, Muriel Spark (Scotland) for The Driver's Seat, Mary Renault (GB) for Fire From Heaven, Nina Bawden (GB) for The Birds on the Trees, and J.G. Farrell (GB) for Trouble. Only Bawden and Hazzard are still alive.

A popular vote through April 23 on the Man Booker website will determine the winner, who will be announced on May 19.

Carlos Fuentes receives doctorate, criticizes censorship

During a trip to Puerto Rico to receive an honorary doctorate, Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes, 81, spoke out against censorship.

Last fall, Puerto Rican education officials banned five books from high school curricula, including Aura by Fuentes. "Coarse language" was cited as the cause of the block. Fuentes announced that this censorship was "an arbitrary decision that amounted to an 'antidemocratic, anticultural' act," according to an article in The State.

Aura is a complex, dreamlike romance first published in 1962.

Fuentes continues to actively write and publish.

CK Stead wins Sunday Times literary prize

The newly established Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story award has bestowed its first prize on CK Stead of New Zealand for his story "Last Season's Man," a tale of intellectual ego in Croatia.

The award carries a cash prize of 25,000 pounds, and six shortlisted stories including the winner (taken from a pool of 1,152 submissions) will be published in The Sunday Times Magazine.

Judges for the award include Hanif Kureishi, A.S. Byatt, and Nick Hornby. Kureishi called "Last Season's Man" "a fine example of how a short story should be constructed and written," according to an interview on Stuff.

Christian Karlson Stead, who was born in 1932, has published over thirty books since 1964, works which include novels, poetry collections, and essays on literary criticism in addition to short stories. Stead was commended by the Commonwealth Writers Prize in 2005. In the same year he was a finalist for the Tasmania Pacific Fiction Prize for his novel Mansfield, a fictionalized account of New Zealand short story author Katherine Mansfield's struggles to become an established writer during the first World War.

24 March 2010

Young novelists surge in Egypt

An increase of Barnes and Noble-style megabookstore/cafe/lounges in Egypt has engendered a new wave of young Egyptian authors, though, unlike their predecessors, whose literature was steeped in religion, social mores, and political controversy, these new Arabic writers are more interested in depicting the commonplace trials of life in twenty-first century Egypt, such as homelessness, unemployment, suicide, and rape, as well as the influx of European and American influences in the form of pop culture, the Internet, and technology.

Popular new authors and their books include
  • Abu Golayyel, whose humorous, semi-autobiographical A Dog with No Tail recounts a Bedoin construction worker's experiences with prostitution, discrimination, and drug abuse;
  • Hamed Abdel-Samad, whose Farewell to Heaven examines sexual abuse, childhood delusions and illusions, and self-imposed exile in Europe;
  • Ahmed el-Aidy's Being Abbas el-Abd, the story of a video store clerk who experiences social connection only through the Internet and his cell phone; and
  • Mazen al-Aqaad, whose Lost Anger unearths the transfixing, cult-like influence of the Internet while highlighting a group of young people whose miserable and boring lives have led them to form an online suicide cult.
Some view the rising popularity of fiction in socially conservative, authoritarian Egypt as a positive stimulant to progress and political freedom. From an Associated Press article by Hamza Hendawi:
"While not political, the intellectual stimulation created by all this fiction will one day bring about reform and help contain the dangers of religious extremism and sectarianism," said Mohammed Hashem, founder of Dar Merit, publisher of "Being Abbas al-Abd" and many of the more experimental new works.